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Kingdom Protista

Kingdom Protista. If you look at a drop of pond water under a microscope, all the "little creatures" you see swimming around are protists. What is a Protist?. All protists have a nucleus and are therefore eukaryotic . Are either plant-like, animal-like or fungus-like.

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Kingdom Protista

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  1. Kingdom Protista

  2. If you look at a drop of pond water under a microscope, all the "little creatures" you see swimming around areprotists.

  3. What is a Protist? • All protists have a nucleus and are thereforeeukaryotic. • Are either plant-like, animal-like or fungus-like.

  4. Heterotrophs vs. Autotrophs • Animal-like and fungus-like protists and are heterotrophs. They are organisms that cannot make its own food • Plant-like protists are autotrophs – they contain chloroplasts and make their own food.

  5. Animal Like Protists • Protozoansare animal-like protists(heterotrophs)grouped according to how they move. • The wordprotozoameans "little animal." They are so named because many species behave like tiny animals—specifically, they hunt and gather other microbes as food.

  6. All protozoa digest their food in stomach-like compartments called vacuoles. As they chow down, they make and give off nitrogen, which is an element that plants and other higher creatures can use. • Protozoa can be classified into three general groups based on how they move: • Pseudopods • Flagellum • Cilia

  7. Pseudopods • Pseudopods: or “false foot” • Cell membrane pushes in one direction & the cytoplasm flows into the bulge. This allows the protozoan to move, dragging the rest of the cell behind it engulfing food as they go

  8. Amoebae • Aquatic – lives in ponds, ditches, or slowly moving streams. • Just visible to the naked eye • Unicellular • Obtain nutrition by feeding on other animals • have a thin cell membrane but no cell wall. • no definite shape

  9. EXAMPLE OF HOW PSEUDOPODS MOVE FLOW PUSH DRAG

  10. It can form 2 pseudopods to surround & trap food. Then form a food vacuole to break down food in the cytoplasm.

  11. Flagellum • The smallest of the protozoa • Flagellates (FLAJ-uh-lits) use their flagella to move, whip-like projections poking out of their cells, providing a back and forth movement • Can have one or several long flagella • Unicelluar • Has characteristics of both plants and animals

  12. Euglena (yoo-glee-nuh) • Move freely and feed on other organisms • Makes its own food and also obtains nutrients by feeding as well. • Has an eyespot (to see) • When an eyespot detects light it uses flagellum to move toward the light so that its chloroplast can carry out photosynthesis

  13. Cilia • Generally the largest protozoa • Unicellular, slipper shaped • Cilia – hair-like structures - help organisms move, get food and sense environment

  14. Paramecium • Feeds with the help of a structure called an oral groove – where food is drawn in by external and internal cilia to form a food vacuole • Will eat the other two types of protozoa as well as bacteria. • Anal pore sends out waste • Aquatic - common in ponds and slow moving streams

  15. ORAL GROOVE

  16. Plant-like protists • Algae are eukaryotic autotrophs. • They, along with other eukaryotic autotrophs, form the foundation of Earth’s food chains. • They produce much of Earth’s oxygen. • Found in ponds and ditches, and even in shallow rain puddles

  17. Volvox • Unicellular protists that has chloroplasts that can carry out photosynthesis • Does not live alone • Forms groups called colonies • Two small flagella that are used to move them • Cells near the surface are specialized to move the entire colony through water • Food source – makes its nutrients.

  18. A Volvox is a hollow boll composed of hundreds of flagellated cells in a single layer.

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